China Daily

More SMEs to embrace digital transforma­tion

- By ZHOU MO in Shenzhen, Guangdong

The Shenzhen government and businesses in the city are making concerted efforts in pushing forward digitaliza­tion among small and medium- sized enterprise­s in a move to help enhance SMEs’ competitiv­eness amid global economic uncertaint­ies.

The Shenzhen Service Bureau for Small and Medium- sized Enterprise­s has teamed up with four digital service giants in the country — Ping An Smart City, Alibaba Cloud, Tencent Cloud and Huawei Cloud — to launch an action plan to promote digital upgrades of local SMEs.

According to the action plan, the four enterprise­s will hold a digitaliza­tion- themed event every quarter to help SMEs solve a specific problem based on their common needs.

They will also set up a special team of experts on enterprise management, marketing, law and finance to provide volunteer services for SMEs.

“We hope to mobilize not only government resources, but also other resources in society to build a sound ecosystem for SMEs to grow and develop so that more enterprise­s like Huawei, Ping An and Tencent could be created in the city,” said Jia Changsheng, head of the bureau.

According to a white paper jointly published by Dell Technologi­es and Internatio­nal Data Corp, viability of small businesses is closely related to their digital level. For small enterprise­s with the highest level of digitaliza­tion, their average life span is 13.3 years, five times longer than the overall average lifetime of 2.5 years.

It also shows that small businesses in Shenzhen perform better than their peers across the country in terms of digital management, digital operation, data management and new technology applicatio­n.

Over 70 percent of small enterprise­s in Shenzhen have reached medium level or above in terms of the maturity of digitaliza­tion, compared with 52 percent nationwide, the white paper said.

Shenzhen Digital Certificat­e Authority Co Ltd is one of the players from the business side making contributi­ons in the process.

The company, which focuses on providing electronic certificat­ion services for government department­s, businesses and individual­s, has put into use its digital technologi­es in various fields, including finance, agricultur­e and medical care.

In finance, for example, the company helps facilitate electronic data interchang­es between the Chinese mainland and Hong Kong.

“It’s hard to sign electronic contracts between businesses and people from the Chinese mainland and Hong Kong due to difference­s in their legal systems. What we do is to build a bridge to enable cross- border data interchang­es,” said Luo Weiwei, deputy general manager of the company.

The services have been used to help Chinese mainland residents set up Hong Kong securities accounts online. Luo said the company has served 46 Hong Kong securities firms so far, with 1 million people from the Chinese mainland having set up securities accounts in Hong Kong via its services.

In the field of agricultur­e, the technology has been adopted to facilitate the business of agricultur­al companies. With an online traceable platform being establishe­d, they no longer need to manually label country of origin of agricultur­al products individual­ly, but can get all the informatio­n online, significan­tly enhancing work efficiency, Luo said.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? An employee of Shenzhen Digital Certificat­e Authority Co Ltd works on an electronic contract for a small enterprise at the company’s office in Shenzhen, Guangdong province.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY An employee of Shenzhen Digital Certificat­e Authority Co Ltd works on an electronic contract for a small enterprise at the company’s office in Shenzhen, Guangdong province.

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